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VZCZCXR04 167 

00  RUEHDBU  RUEHFL  RUEHKW  RUEHLA  RUEHROV  RUEHSR 
DE  RUEHVJ  #2931  3241719 
ZNY  CCCCC  ZZH 
O 201719Z  NOV  06 
FM  AMEMBASSY  SARAJEVO 

TO  RUEHC/SECSTATE  WASHDC  IMMEDIATE  4872 

INFO  RUEHZL /EUROPEAN  POLITICAL  COLLECTIVE  PRIORITY 

RUEKJCS/JCS  WASHINGTON  DC  PRIORITY 

RHEHNSC/NSC  WASHDC  PRIORITY 

RUEKJCS/ SECDEF  WASHDC  PRIORITY 

RUFOAOA/USNIC  SARAJEVO  PRIORITY 

CONFIDENTIAL  SARAJEVO  002931 

SIPDIS 

SIPDIS 

EUR  FOR  DICARLO,  EUR/SCE  FOR  HOH,  FOOKS  AND  STINCHCOMB,  NSC 
FOR  BRAUN,  OSD  FOR  FLORY 

E . 0 . 12958:  DECL : 11/01/2015 
TAGS:  PGOV  PREL  BK 

SUBJECT:  BOSNIA:  INAUGURAL  SESSION  OF  BIH  PARLIAMENT 

COLLAPSES  UNDER  COALITION  PRESSURE 


Classified  By:  Political  Counselor  Michael  J.  Murphy,  reasons  1.4  (b)  a 
nd  (d) . 

1[1 . (C)  SUMMARY:  At  the  inaugural  session  of  the  BiH  House  of 

Representatives  (HoR)  held  on  November  20,  delegates  failed 
to  agree  on  even  the  most  mundane  procedural  issues, 
including  the  organization  of  the  parliament  and  the  election 
of  the  three  co-speakers.  What  was  thought  to  be  a 
pre-cooked  arrangement  for  the  selection  of  the  co-speakers 
unraveled  when  the  largest  Serb  party,  the  Alliance  of 
Independent  Social  Democrats  (SNSD)  refused  to  agree  to  a 
vote,  noting  that  a government  coalition  should  be  agreed 
prior  to  the  election  of  the  speakers  in  order  to  maximize 
the  effectiveness  of  the  future  government  and  parliament. 

The  session  exposed  some  of  Party  for  BiH ' s political 
weaknesses,  since  it  had  sought  to  engineer  the  speakership 
deal.  The  HoR  will  reconvene  on  Thursday,  November  23, 
though  it  is  unclear  whether  it  will  settle  on  new 
co-speakers  then.  END  SUMMARY. 

T_2 . (SBU)  At  the  inagural  session  of  the  BiH  HoR,  Alliance  of 
Independent  Social  Democrats  (SNSD)  MP  Nikola  Spiric,  one  of 
the  co-speakers  of  the  HoR  in  the  previous  parliament  and  a 
leading  contender  to  be  Prime  Minister  in  the  next  state 
government,  announced  that  his  party  would  not  support 
selection  of  the  co-speakers  of  the  HoR  until  a decision  had 
been  made  on  the  formation  of  a state  government  coalition. 

Prior  to  the  session,  the  Bosniak  Party  of  Democratic  Action 
(SDA)  and  Party  for  BiH  (SBiH)  agreed  to  the  election  of 
Beriz  Belkic  of  the  Party  for  BiH  (SBiH)  and  Martin  Raguz  of 
the  Croatian  Democratic  Union-1990  (HDZ-1990)  as  Bosniak  and 
Croat  speakers,  respectively,  and  Sulejman  Tihic  as 
co-speaker  of  the  House  of  Peoples. 

11.3 . (C)  Spiric ' s move  caught  SBiH,  HDZ-1990,  and  SDA  by 

surprise,  and  their  disarray  was  visible  during  the  session. 

Belkic  was  furious  at  Spiric,  but  was  unable  to  garner  the 
votes  needed  to  stop  him.  SDA  MPs  simply  sat  on  their  hands 
and  watched.  The  public  failure  made  clear  SBiH  is  not  as 
close  to  concluding  a coalition  agreement  with  any  party, 
except  perhaps  HDZ-1990,  as  the  SBiH-leaning  daily  Dnevni 
Avaz  claims.  SBiH  looked  more  like  the  other  major  parties' 
coalition  partner  of  last  resort  rather  than  the  Svengali  of 
the  Bosnian  political  scene. 

1I_4 . (C)  COMMENT:  Spiric  is  often  cocky,  and  he  certainly 
played  to  the  galleries  today,  proudly  flexing  the  SNSD's 
parliamentary  muscle.  Undoubtedly,  Avaz  and  others  will 
portray  SNSD's  decision  to  block  a deal  on  the  speakership  as 
"Serb  highhandedness,"  but  there  is  a less  sinister  political 


logic  behind  SNSD ' s actions.  Spiric,  the  leading  SNSD 
candidate  for  PM,  may  have  been  seeking  to  prevent  the 
conflicts  that  could  result  if  the  parliamentary  leadership 
comes  from  parties  not  included  in  the  governing  coalition,  a 
sign  of  SNSD 1 s interest  in  participating  in  an  effective 
state-level  government.  The  episode  made  several 
parliamentarians  nervous  about  their  parties 1 ability  to  form 
a government,  however.  Several  approached  us  on  the  margins 
of  the  session  and  hinted  that  they  hope  the  U.S.  intervenes 
to  guide  coalition  talks.  END  COMMENT. 

MCELHANEY